Mrs. Bush Condemns the Assassination of Zakia Zaki, Director of Peace Radio

I want to express my deepest sympathies, and those of the American
people, to the people of Afghanistan and to Zakia Zaki's family. Zaki
was murdered last week by gunmen reported to be supporters of the
Taliban insurgency. The former director of Peace Radio--a private
station in Jabal-us-Siraj, Afghanistan--Zaki leaves behind her husband
and six children, including an infant son. Zaki is the second prominent
female Afghan journalist to be murdered in a week.

I strongly condemn the killings and urge the free world, nations which
love peace, to not only condemn the killings, but to use every ounce of
their power to prevent them from happening in the future.

Zaki's brutal killing is a reminder of the threat terrorism poses to the
most fundamental individual rights--including the rights to free speech,
to a free press, and to equal dignity for women.

The oppression of women is central to the Taliban's vision for
Afghanistan. In the weeks following September 11, Americans were
shocked to see the images of Afghan women living under the Taliban
regime--denied the right to work, the right to move about freely, and
the right to be educated. As Zaki's murder shows, five years later,
Taliban fighters still cling to their repressive worldview. They oppose
the free exchange of ideas, and long to return to a time when girls
could not attend school.

Today, however, women and girls are in classrooms throughout
Afghanistan--democracy has brought about a more free and open society.

The American people stand with the people of Afghanistan and with Zaki's
family. We are proud to support them in their efforts to build
Afghanistan's new democracy, and to secure a more hopeful and peaceful
future for the children of both our countries.